Should the ancillary orders of Snaden J have been retrospectively revoked?
44 The basis upon which the primary judge dismissed the RTBU's application was in contest.
45 Metro contended that the primary judge rejected the RTBU's application for an order revoking the orders of Snaden J in the exercise of the Court's discretion to refuse to make an order with retrospective effect.
46 That contention was succinctly put by Metro as follows:
[6] Properly understood, his Honour applied principles derived from Ormiston JA's extensive analysis (Buchanan and Eames JJA agreeing) in Hartley Poynton Ltd v Ali (2005) 11 VR 568 (Hartley Poynton) in declining to exercise discretion to revoke the 9 August Orders nunc pro tunc on the ground that to do so would alter substantive (rather than merely procedural) rights. His Honour's reference to Kable No 2 underscored the policy rationale behind eschewing revocation of superior court orders nunc pro tunc. There was no error, appellable or otherwise, in that approach.
[7] The primary judge's ratio decidendi appears at [59] of the Judgment. That ratio did not directly apply Kable No 2. Rather, the primary judge used the policy rationale articulated by the majority in Kable No 2 (at [39]) to contextualise two principles derived from Hartley Poynton, which his Honour then went on to apply in dismissing the RTBU's application.
47 The difficulty with that submission is that, although at [59] the primary judge did state by way of principle that "orders that are intended to have retrospective operation may only be made if they affect procedural, not substantive rights", no affected substantive right of Metro was identified in his Honour's reasons and there is no reasoning or basis given for any conclusion that by the making of the order with retrospective effect sought by the RTBU, a substantive right of Metro would be affected. Nor is there any discussion as to why, in the exercise of the Court's discretion, the RTBU's application for a retrospective order should be refused. Additionally, the characterisation proffered by Metro is disjointed from the reasoning of the primary judge which preceded [59] including all of the discussion in relation to what the primary judge referred to as the "more fundamental question".
48 The RTBU contended that the primary judge refused its application because he considered such an order to be inutile. It postulated that the primary judge rejected the RTBU's application having answered in the negative the "more fundamental question" he posed as to the meaning and effect of s 413(5) of the FW Act. That contention was made in the following terms in the submission of the RTBU:
The primary judge dismissed the revocation application on the basis that revocation of any order breached by the RTBU nunc pro tunc would not avoid the application of s 413(5) of the FW Act, because revocation nunc pro tunc would not alter the historical fact that there had been an order made that had, in fact, been contravened in the past: Pt A tab 5 [59]. Thus, revocation of a court order nunc pro tunc provided no pathway to a person to avoid the operation of s 413(5) should that person have contravened that court order.
49 The primary judge's reasoning at [59] indicates that the primary judge's decision determinatively turned on his acceptance of what appears as a statement of principle at [59] as follows:
Likewise, retrospective orders cannot deem something that did exist (here, valid and binding orders) never to have existed or to be deemed never to have been made.
50 That statement, for the reasons that follow, essentially describes what it is that a nunc pro tunc order does. The sentence supports the view that the primary judge proceeded on the basis that he lacked the power to make an order with the effect he there described. On that basis it may be concluded, as Flick and Anastassiou JJ have concluded, that the primary judge refused the RTBU's application because he was of the view that this Court lacked the power to make a nunc pro tunc order of the kind sought by the RTBU.
51 As Beazley JA (Ipp JA agreeing and Campbell JA agreeing generally) explained in Turagadamudamu v PMP Ltd (2009) 75 NSWLR 397 at [48]:
Nunc pro tunc means, literally, 'now instead of then'. E R H Ivamy, Mozley and Whiteley's Law Dictionary 11th ed (1993) Sydney, Butterworths at 184, defines nunc pro tunc as: 'Now instead of then; meaning that a judgment is entered, or document enrolled, so as to have the same legal force and effect as if it had been entered or enrolled on an earlier day.'
52 What such an order does is "antedat[e] the effect" of the order made: Hartley Poynton Ltd v Ali (2005) 11 VR 568 at [24] (Ormiston JA with Buchanan and Eames JJA agreeing). Where an order revokes an earlier order nunc pro tunc, the revocation is taken to have been done as at the antedated time, that is, at the time when the earlier order was first made. The earlier order is treated as revoked upon its making and not to have existed from that time.
53 There are many examples of nunc pro tunc orders which have the effect of deeming something to exist which did not exist. It suffices to identify two. In Emanuele v Australian Securities Commission (1997) 188 CLR 114, a majority of the High Court held that leave to apply for a winding up order could be granted nunc pro tunc. In Barnes v Fortytwo International Pty Ltd [2010] FCAFC 87 (Stone, Jacobson and Nicholas JJ), in the context of a party having used documents in one proceeding which it had been provided in another proceeding without first obtaining leave of the Court to do so, the Full Court held that leave could be granted nunc pro tunc.
54 The application of the slip rule is another example of an order made with retrospective effect which removes or corrects an earlier order. It is well established in that context that "the 'later order corrects the earlier order, and speaks from the date of the earlier order, which then operates with full force as corrected.' The earlier order is deemed or treated as having always operated as corrected": VFS Group Pty Ltd v BM2008 Pty Ltd (in liq) [2010] VSCA 277 at [25] (Tate JA with Nettle and Harper JJA agreeing). See also Elyard Corp Pty Ltd v DDB Needham Sydney Pty Ltd (1995) 61 FCR 385 at 391-392 (Lockhart J with Black CJ agreeing) and at 400-401 (Lindgren J with Black CJ agreeing); Luck v University of Southern Queensland (2018) 265 FCR 304 at [69] (Mortimer J with Logan J agreeing).
55 On the basis of those authorities and for the reasons given by Flick J, in my view, this Court undoubtedly has the power to revoke its own orders retrospectively from their outset and thereby deem an order previously made to have never been made.
56 The traditional capacity of a Court to make orders of this kind is not impaired by the principle in Kable (No 2) - that an order of a superior court is valid and must be complied with until set aside. That principle has a very long pedigree: Cameron v Cole (1944) 68 CLR 571 at 590 (Rich J with Latham CJ agreeing at 585), at 598-599 (McTiernan J), at 607 (Williams J); Re Macks; Ex parte Saint (2000) 204 CLR 158 at [19]-[23] (Gleeson CJ), at [53] and [57] (Gaudron J), at [219] (Gummow J), at [256]-[257] (Kirby J), at [344] (Hayne and Callinan JJ). It is not a principle which engages with the power to make orders which revoke a prior order with retrospective effect, although the rationale for the principle should be seen to be consistent with the principle expressed by Kiefel CJ, Keane, Nettle and Edelman JJ in Esso Australia Pty Ltd v Australian Workers' Union (2017) 263 CLR 551 at [49] "that courts should eschew the exercise of inherent power to vary an order nunc pro tunc where the variation would have the effect of altering the substantive rights of the parties".
57 I also respectfully agree with each of Flick and Anastassiou JJ that s 413(5) of the FW Act does not limit or proscribe this Court's powers to make an order nunc pro tunc. When [59] of the primary judge's reasons is read in the context of the prior discussion, framed as it is by the "more fundamental question" which his Honour posed for the parties as to the meaning of s 413(5) of the FW Act, it is possible, despite the view I prefer, that the primary judge refused the RTBU's application because he thought the order it sought was inutile. Given that grounds 1 and 2 of the RTBU's Notice of Appeal address that possibility, I should also here address it.
58 If the primary judge so held, his Honour should be understood to have proceeded on the basis that, for the purposes of s 413(5) of the FW Act, retrospective orders cannot deem valid and binding orders never to have existed and cannot deem the contravention of such orders never to have occurred. If that be so, the primary judge must have understood the words "not have contravened any orders" in s 413(5) to engage a contravention of an order that existed at the time of the contravention irrespective of whether that order had been revoked retrospectively from the outset.
59 If that is the basis upon which the primary judge dismissed the RTBU's application, grounds 1 and 2 of the RTBU's Notice of Appeal challenge that holding and, in my view, should be upheld. With respect to the learned primary judge, the conclusion that the nunc pro tunc revocation of an order which had been contravened would nevertheless engage s 413(5), is inconsistent with the observations made by the majority in Esso at [49]-[50].
60 Before setting out the reasoning in Esso, it is necessary to provide some context.
61 The relevant facts in Esso were that the Fair Work Commission made an order that the Australian Workers' Union ("AWU") stop organising certain industrial action. The AWU continued to organise the industrial action in contravention of that order. The majority (Kiefel CJ, Keane, Nettle and Edelman JJ) found that s 413(5) was intended to apply to past contraventions of orders, such that any person who had not previously complied with a pertinent order was not entitled to the immunity in s 415 of the FW Act. Therefore, because the AWU had breached a relevant order during bargaining for the agreement, it was incapable of satisfying the common requirement specified in s 413(5) and any industrial action organised by it in that bargaining period would not be protected pursuant to s 415 of the FW Act.
62 In resisting the construction of s 413(5) ultimately preferred by the majority, the AWU contended that such a construction of s 413(5) would be productive of capricious and unjust results; that if a bargaining representative contravened an order related to the bargaining for a new agreement, no matter how insignificant or venial the contravention, that the bargaining representative would thereafter be precluded from the protection of s 415. The majority found that this contention was unpersuasive for the reasons set out at [49]-[50] under the heading "Not productive of capricious, unjust results" (emphasis added):
[49] The AWU's contention that to construe s 413(5) in the manner contended for by Esso would be productive of capricious, unjust results is also unpersuasive. The Fair Work Commission has broad powers under s 603 of the Fair Work Act to vary or revoke orders, including power to vary or revoke orders retrospectively. The very considerable breadth of the power accorded by s 603 stands in contrast to the more limited power accorded by s 602 to correct 'obvious errors'. Thus, although it has been said that courts should eschew the exercise of inherent power to vary an order nunc pro tunc where the variation would have the effect of altering the substantive rights of the parties, the statutory power accorded by s 603 is different. As was observed in George Hudson Ltd v Australian Timber Workers' Union in relation to the retrospective operation of the Conciliation and Arbitration Act, the provisions of that Act were not to be read down as if confined to a prospective operation at the expense of the 'great public policy' which the Act embodied, namely, that of encouraging and maintaining 'industrial peace in the Commonwealth'. So also, in Australian Tramway and Motor Omnibus Employees Association v Commissioner for Road Transport and Tramways (NSW), the Court held that the Conciliation Commissioner had power to vary the terms of an award that had expired (but continued in force by operation of statute). As Murphy J stated in R v Gough; Ex parte Key Meats Pty Ltd, it was clear that the Australian Conciliation and Arbitration Commission was entitled to vary or set aside an award provision in accordance with the Act even if its new provision operated 'locally, temporarily, prospectively or retrospectively, provided the provision would have been within the scope or ambit of the original dispute'. The same considerations informed this Court's decision in Re Dingjan; Ex parte Wagner that the power to set aside or vary the terms of a harsh or unfair contract under ss 127A and 127B of the Industrial Relations Act could be exercised in relation to a contract that had been discharged. And the same is surely true of the Fair Work Commission's statutory power under s 603 of the Fair Work Act to vary or revoke orders relating to a proposed agreement or matters arising during the bargaining for such an agreement. To adopt and adapt the language of Kirby J in Emanuele v Australian Securities Commission, it may be inferred that Parliament contemplated that oversight and inadvertence would sometimes occur for which the Fair Work Commission's powers of variation and revocation under s 603 would be available.
[50] Hence, if a document cannot be filed within the time specified in an order made by the Fair Work Commission, an application might be made for the time to be enlarged, or alternatively for the order to be revoked and a new order made allowing greater time, and, if there were good reason for the failure to file the document timeously, no doubt time would be enlarged, especially when it is appreciated that to refuse to enlarge time would preclude the possibility of protected industrial action by reason of s 413(5). Similarly, if a document were filed within time but later found not to comply with requirements imposed by the Fair Work Commission, and there was a satisfactory excuse for the failure in compliance, time in which to file a document complying with requirements might be enlarged retrospectively. If, in exercise of the power conferred by s 603, an order were made by the Fair Work Commission varying or revoking a previous order with effect from a time earlier than the alleged contravention, the effect would be that there would not have been a contravention of the order. If, however, it appeared that the failure to file the document on time or to file what was required by the previous order was the result of contumaciousness or unacceptably careless disregard for the terms of the order, or if it were thought that to alter the order retrospectively would amount to an inappropriate or unfair interference with the rights of the parties, it might be expected that the Fair Work Commission would decline to exercise the power conferred by s 603 with the effect that the immunity attaching to protected industrial action would not arise.
63 There can be no doubt, that the majority considered that a valid and binding order made by the Fair Work Commission that had been contravened could be revoked retrospectively from the outset and that, for the purposes of s 413(5), "the effect would be that there would not have been a contravention of the order". In arriving at that view the majority must have construed the words "not have contravened any orders" in s 413(5) as not engaging the contravention of an order that had been revoked with retrospective effect prior to the date of the contravention. The primary judge must have come to the opposite conclusion if his Honour proceeded on the basis here postulated. Although his Honour briefly referred to Esso (at [45]) there is no indication in his Honour's reasons as to whether the reasoning of the majority at [49]-[50] was considered.
64 Metro contended that the observations in Esso were of no assistance because they were only applicable to orders made and revoked with retrospective effect by the Fair Work Commission and not to orders made and revoked by a court. Metro relied upon the observations made in Esso being focused on orders made by the Fair Work Commission and not by a court and that the power there addressed was the power conferred upon the Fair Work Commission by s 603 of the FW Act to revoke its orders with retrospective effect. Although some reference is made at both [49] and [50] to orders made with retrospective effect by courts, it is true that the focus of those paragraphs is on orders made by the Fair Work Commission and upon the Fair Work Commission's capacity to make orders revoking its own orders with retrospective effect.
65 That that should be so is not surprising. The majority in Esso was dealing with the proper construction of s 413(5) and the AWU's contention that Esso's construction of that provision would be productive of capricious and unjust results. The contention made by the AWU was made in the context of a contravention of an order of the Fair Work Commission, and its hypothetical example of the contravention of an order (at [26]) would have been read by the majority as a contravention of an order of the Fair Work Commission. The majority answered the AWU's contention by reference to the hypothetical example in the context in which it was made.
66 What, for current purposes, is material in the answer given by the majority to the contention put by the AWU, is what can be discerned about the proper construction of the words "not have contravened any orders" in s 413(5) of the FW Act. The words "any orders" obviously have application to any orders of either the Fair Work Commission or a court. Section 413(5) draws no distinction between orders of the Fair Work Commission and orders of a court. In that context, there is no conceivable basis for thinking that the majority in Esso intended that the view expressed by them about the meaning of s 413(5), and in particular the effect under that provision of the retrospective revocation of an order that had been contravened, was limited to orders made only by the Fair Work Commission. There is no basis for construing the words of s 413(5) as providing for a different effect depending upon whether an order of the Commission is contravened but then revoked with retrospective effect as compared to the case of the contravention of an order of the court revoked with retrospective effect. As the RTBU contended, s 413(5) cannot be construed as speaking with two voices.
67 In answering the AWU's contention, the majority in Esso did (at [49]) address the question of the power to make orders with retrospective effect. The majority there stated that the power reposed in the Fair Work Commission by s 603 of the FW Act was "different" to the inherent power of a Court to vary an order nunc pro tunc, the difference being that courts "should eschew" the exercise of such a power where the substantive rights of the parties would be altered. The reference to a difference, upon which Metro relied to distinguish the observations made by the majority, was not addressing the proper construction of s 413(5) at all. Those observations were concerned with a court's discretion to make orders revoking a prior order with retrospective effect. They say nothing of what effect, for the purposes of s 413(5), such orders have once made. That question, which is the critical question for present purposes, was dealt with by the majority at [50] and was not, and given the terms of s 413(5), could not be dealt with differentially as between orders of the Fair Work Commission and orders of a court.
68 The principle from Kable (No 2) was not referred to by the majority in Esso in the observations made about the operation and proper construction of s 413(5) of the FW Act. Nor is it apparent how that principle could inform the meaning and effect of s 413(5). If the primary judge did rely upon Kable (No 2) to conclude that the words "not have contravened any orders" in s 413(5) would engage a contravention of an order that existed at the time of the contravention but which had been revoked with retrospective effect, the primary judge's reliance on Kable (No 2) was misplaced.